Land and Treaties: Relationships and Responsibilities
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
At 50, the WAG is embracing a spirit of reconciliation and reinvention
6 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 24, 2021Winnipeg School Division to review all its schools named after people
6 minute read Preview Thursday, Sep. 23, 2021Shoal Lake 40 toasts clean water
6 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 15, 2021Flags of Treaty One, the Dakota and Métis fly at city hall
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 15, 2021Iconic Churchill Tundra Buggy goes electric
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, Aug. 25, 2021Early childhood educators discuss First Nations students’ needs
4 minute read Preview Yesterday at 7:05 PM CDTIndigenous speakers, politicians watching audit of languages office closely
6 minute read Preview Updated: Yesterday at 1:45 PM CDTAFN chief rebukes Alberta separation talks in meeting with King Charles
3 minute read Preview Updated: Yesterday at 12:01 PM CDTMMF warns prospectors, developers to consult — or else
4 minute read Monday, Jun. 1, 2026In a room filled with government and prospecting industry leads, a Manitoba Métis Federation rep delivered a sharp message: work with us or prepare for legal action.
The Métis government has been having cabinet discussions about litigation, Lorne Pelletier, a MMF senior economic adviser, told the crowd.
“It’s not the path we want to go down, but it’s the path we’ll have to go down based on the actions of industry and the actions of government,” he said.
Pelletier spoke at a Manitoba Prospectors and Developers Association event Monday in Winnipeg. Roughly 50 government, Indigenous and industry officials gathered at the Manitoba Legislative Building, liaising and providing work updates.
Peace, justice and bringing this country together
5 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 1, 2026Even residential school couldn’t erase who Christina Henderson was
7 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 30, 2026Protected areas and thriving lodges can co-exist
5 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026Spring is crunch-time when you work at a remote fishing or hunting lodge. Crews are busy updating cabins, repairing generators, getting boats in the water, and preparing to welcome clients. These same activities are unfolding across the Seal River Watershed in northern Manitoba. And this year, they come with an added sense of opportunity.
A new proposal to protect the Seal River Watershed was recently released for public comment on the EngageMB website.
Designed by the Sayisi Dene, Northlands Denesuline, Barren Lands, and O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree First Nations, the Manitoba government, and the government of Canada, with input from stakeholders and the public, the plan calls for creating a network of protected areas across 50,000 sq. kilometres of healthy lands and waters.
These new designations — a combination of Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area, provincial parks, and a national park reserve — would honour Dene and Cree cultures and sustain caribou, grizzlies, and polar bears.